Roads Taken: The Professorial Life, Scholarship in Place, and the Public Good

Roger Epp & Bill Spellman, eds.

$23.99 – $28.95

Public liberal arts colleges are higher education’s gems, yet their intimate campus settings and locations outside of the intellectual-cultural capitals challenge the traditional rhythm of academic careers. These stories demonstrate that the noblest traditions of higher education might be lived out most meaningfully on small, liberal arts campuses.

Description

Public liberal arts colleges are higher education’s gems, yet their intimate campus settings and locations outside of the intellectual-cultural capitals challenge the traditional rhythm of academic careers. Professors trained at elite research institutions, usually located in large urban centers, must adapt to the holistic undergraduate education emphasized at colleges often located in smaller communities. The authors in this collection serve as pathfinders and exemplars for academic careers that integrate teaching, scholarship, and citizenship, rooted in place. Their stories demonstrate that the noblest traditions of higher education might be lived out most meaningfully on small, liberal arts campuses.

The essays in this volume paint a realistic portrait of the life of the faculty in public arts colleges in the twenty-first century, with all of its inherent joys and trials. They also illustrate the dilemma of the young PhD: Follow in the footsteps of the graduate mentor or seek—or at least accept—a divergent path. An excellent case is made for the latter, and an equally strong case for the significance of the public liberal arts professoriate—and the institutions it serves.

Roads Taken offers important insights into professorial lives and careers. Faculty from various disciplines seek to define the challenges, rewards, and idiosyncrasies of professing the liberal arts within the public sphere in essays that are candid and revealing about the career paths they have followed. This is a valuable book for readers at any point in a life of college teaching.

—Samuel Schuman, author of Old Main

Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Roads TakenRoger Epp and Bill Spellman

1. A Place Where Ideas MatterJoel M. Sipress, History, University of Wisconsin–Superior

2. Detours, Intersections, and a Few Bumps in the RoadM. Therese Seibert, Sociology, Keene State College

3. The Outsiders: Undergraduate Research in a Liberal Arts InstitutionDylan Fischer, Forest Ecology, The Evergreen State College

4. How Everything Influences Everything Else: The Strange and Wonderful Journey to an Integrated Academic LifeJeffrey Trawick-Smith, Education, Eastern Connecticut State University

5. Notes from an Academic Odd CoupleLee Rozelle and Jill A. Wicknick, English and Biology, University of Montevallo

6. “’Tis the gift to come down where we ought to be”Gary Towsley, Mathematics, State University of New York at Geneseo

7. A Kid for LifeQuan Tran, Mathematics, University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma

8. Dr. Monograph: or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Liberal ArtsJanet Schrunk Ericksen, English, University of Minnesota, Morris

10. What Have I Done?!: A Renaissance Art Historian Finds Her Way in the Rural MidwestJulia A. DeLancey, Art History, Truman State University

11. How One Becomes What One Is 163Jonathan R. Cohen, Philosophy, University of Maine at Farmington

12. Neither Here nor There: Testing the Boundaries of Place and PedagogyEllen Holmes Pearson, History, University of North Carolina Asheville

13. Finding the Road Back to the “Last Good Job in America”Kathleen S. Fine-Dare, Anthropology and Gender/Women’s Studies, Fort Lewis College

14. The Liberal Arts Leave the Ivory Tower and Enter the TrenchesRobin Bates, English, St. Mary’s College of Maryland

Afterword: The Road Taken and the Difference It MakesJoseph Urgo, Senior Fellow, Association of American Colleges and Universities, University of North Carolina Asheville

Notes on Contributors

Authors

Roger Epp is professor of political science at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. During more than two decades at what is now the University’s Augustana Campus, he received its teaching award and served as its head from 2004 to 2011. Under his leadership, Augustana became COPLAC’s first Canadian member. As a public scholar, his work includes We Are All Treaty People: Prairie Essays, a radio documentary on rural Canada, and articles in such diverse venues asInside Higher Ed, the literary magazine Small Farmer’s Journal, and academic journals including theReview of International Studies.

Bill Spellman is director of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges and professor of history at the University of North Carolina Asheville, where he has also served as Dean of Humanities. His most recent publications include A Short History of Western Political Thought (2011) and Uncertain Identity: International Migration since 1945 (2008). He is also co-author of a college textbook recently released in a third edition titled The West: A Narrative History, 2 vols. (2012).

Reviews

This volume is of interest to many. But in many respects, this volume will be of particular interest to academics who find that their career paths include working in the small, public, liberal arts sector.

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